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Definitions
4. The following
terms are used in this Standard with the meanings specified:
A lease is an
agreement whereby the lessor conveys to the lessee in return
for a payment or series of payments the right to use an asset
for an agreed period of time.
A finance lease
is a lease that transfers substantially all the risks and
rewards incidental to ownership of an asset. Title may or may
not eventually be transferred.
An operating
lease is a lease other than a finance lease.
A non-cancellable
lease is a lease that is cancellable only:
(a) upon the
occurrence of some remote contingency;
(b) with the
permission of the lessor;
(c) if the lessee
enters into a new lease for the same or an equivalent
asset with the same lessor; or
(d) upon payment by
the lessee of such an additional amount that, at
inception of the lease, continuation of the lease is
reasonably
certain.
The inception of
the lease is the earlier of the date of the lease agreement
and the date of commitment by the parties to the principal
provisions of the lease. As at this date:
(a) a lease is
classified as either an operating or a finance lease;
and
(b) in the case of a
finance lease, the amounts to be recognised at the
commencement of the lease term are determined.
The commencement
of the lease term is the date from which the lessee
is entitled to exercise its right to use the leased asset. It
is the date of initial recognition of the lease
(ie the recognition of the assets, liabilities,
income or expenses resulting from the lease, as appropriate).
The lease term
is the non-cancellable period for which the lessee has
contracted to lease the asset together with any further terms
for which the lessee has the option to continue
to lease the asset, with or without further
payment, when at the inception of the lease it is reasonably
certain that the lessee will exercise the option.
Minimum lease
payments are the payments over the lease term that
the lessee is or can be required to make, excluding
contingent rent, costs for services and taxes to
be paid by and reimbursed to the lessor,
together with:
(a) for a lessee,
any amounts guaranteed by the lessee or by a party
related to the lessee; or
(b) for a lessor,
any residual value guaranteed to the lessor by:
(i) the lessee;
(ii) a party
related to the lessee; or
(iii) a third
party unrelated to the lessor that is financially
capable
of discharging the obligations under the guarantee.
However, if the
lessee has an option to purchase the asset at a price that
is expected to be sufficiently lower than fair value at the
date the option becomes exercisable for it to be
reasonably certain, at the inception of the
lease, that the option will be exercised, the minimum
lease payments comprise the minimum payments payable over
the lease term to the expected date of exercise of this
purchase option and the payment required to
exercise it.
Fair value is
the amount for which an asset could be exchanged, or a
liability settled, between knowledgeable, willing parties in
an arm’s length transaction.
Economic life
is either:
(a) the period over
which an asset is expected to be economically usable
by one or more users; or
(b) the number of
production or similar units expected to be obtained
from the asset by one or more users.
Useful life
is the estimated remaining period, from the commencement
of the lease term, without limitation by the lease term,
over which the economic benefits embodied in the asset are
expected to be consumed by the entity.
Guaranteed
residual value is:
(a) for a lessee,
that part of the residual value that is guaranteed
by
the lessee or by a party related to the lessee (the amount of
the guarantee being the maximum amount that could, in
any event, become payable); and
(b) for a lessor,
that part of the residual value that is guaranteed
by
the lessee or by a third party unrelated to the lessor that is
financially capable of discharging the obligations under
the guarantee.
Unguaranteed
residual value is that portion of the residual value of
the leased asset, the realisation of which by the lessor
is not assured or is guaranteed solely by a
party related to the lessor.
Initial direct
costs are incremental costs that are directly attributable
to negotiating and arranging a lease, except for such
costs incurred by manufacturer or dealer lessors.
Gross investment
in the lease is the aggregate of:
(a) the minimum
lease payments receivable by the lessor under a finance
lease, and
(b) any unguaranteed
residual value accruing to the lessor.
Net investment in
the lease is the gross investment in the lease discounted
at the interest rate implicit in the lease.
Unearned finance
income is the difference between:
(a) the gross
investment in the lease, and
(b) the net
investment in the lease.
The interest rate
implicit in the lease is the discount rate that, at the
inception of the lease, causes the aggregate present
value of (a) the minimum lease payments and (b)
the unguaranteed residual value to be equal to
the sum of (i) the fair value of the leased asset and (ii)
any initial direct costs of the lessor.
The lessee’s
incremental borrowing rate of interest is the rate of
interest the lessee would have to pay on a similar lease
or, if that is not determinable, the rate that,
at the inception of the lease, the lessee would
incur to borrow over a similar term, and with a similar
security, the funds necessary to purchase the asset.
Contingent rent
is that portion of the lease payments that is not fixed
in amount but is based on the future amount of a factor
that changes other than with the passage of time
(eg percentage of future sales, amount of future
use, future price indices, future market rates of
interest).
5. A lease agreement
or commitment may include a provision to adjust the lease
payments for changes in the construction or acquisition cost
of the leased property or for changes in some other measure of
cost or value, such as general price levels, or in the lessor’s
costs of financing the lease, during the period between the
inception of the lease and the commencement of the lease term.
If so, the effect of any such changes shall be deemed to have
taken place at the inception of the lease for the purposes of
this Standard.
6. The definition of
a lease includes contracts for the hire of an asset that
contain a provision giving the hirer an option to acquire
title to the asset upon the fulfilment of agreed conditions.
These contracts are sometimes known as hire purchase contracts.
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